to show that your confident in what you're talking about. show them that you are right in what you say.
Katrina did not make eye contact during the speech.
Eye contact is an important nonverbal element when making a speech. Maintaining eye contact with the audience helps to establish trust, engagement, and connection. It conveys confidence and sincerity, enhancing the speaker's credibility and making the speech more impactful.
Eye contact, fluent speech, having emotions and clear pronunciation of words.
that means if a girl give a guy eye contact that means she likes him and if the guy does it well he likes the girl
maintaining eye contact with your audience
maintaining eye contact with your audience
You can practice maintaining eye contact with the audience before a speech by rehearsing in front of a mirror or recording yourself speaking. Focus on looking at different points around the room and making brief eye contact with individuals rather than scanning the whole audience. Gradually increase the duration of eye contact to build confidence and connection with your listeners.
Visual aid
When you make eye contact with him, look away shyly and smile...trust me he'll get it.
To give a successful public speech, prepare your content well, know your audience, practice speaking in front of a mirror or friends, maintain eye contact, speak clearly, and engage the audience by using anecdotes or rhetorical questions. Remember to breathe deeply to calm your nerves and speak with confidence.
To get a dog's attention or eye contact, first have them sit in front of you. Then raise a dog treat in front of your eyes and say "Watch Me". When they look at you give them the treat. Once they learn that command you can use it in training to get eye contact.
The six basic factors of a speech are preparation, looking confident, vocal delivery, eye contact, posture, and timing. A good balance of all of these will lead to a great speech.